So, I guess telescopes are selective?

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rabinoz

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Re: So, I guess telescopes are selective?
« Reply #60 on: September 17, 2018, 04:53:16 AM »
Assumption other celestial bodies are further away from the surface of the earth.

Planes have flown higher than 60,000 feet.
Those aren’t assumptions.  They’re facts.  Mathematically and directly provable facts...unless you’ve got something that proves otherwise.

Mike
This is a FE forum and those are Re-tard facts.
I thought the FE forum should stick to facts not totallackey's fuction.

Real facts:
  • There are "other celestial bodies" that "are further away from the surface of the earth" than the sun.
    Samuel Birley Rowbotham himself said:
    Quote
    so that it is perfectly safe to affirm that the under edge of the sun is considerably less than 700 statute miles above the earth.
    and
    Quote
    all the visible luminaries in the firmament are contained within a vertical distance of 1000 statute miles.
    Surely that implies that some of the stars are "are further away from the surface of the earth" than the sun.

  • Planes have flown higher than 60,000 feet. Whether the earth is flat, spherical or donut shaped, that is a fact!
    Quote
    The highest commercial airliner altitude was 60,000 feet by Concorde. The highest military air-breathing engine airplane was the SR-71 — about 90,000 feet.

Re: So, I guess telescopes are selective?
« Reply #61 on: September 17, 2018, 09:13:54 PM »
So, telescopes and binoculars help us see things that are far away. Many flat-earthers have "proven" that the earth is flat by looking at ships sailing over the sea with one. We also can use them to look at the planets or celestial bodies, like the moon and all of its details.

My question is that if our telescopes, high powered or not, can see and even take pictures of celestial bodies that are very far away, even further than the sun. Why can't we use these telescopes to see the sun when it is on the other side of the flat earth? Why can't we simply go on a mountain or a plane and look at our sun or see our sun's sunlight from a far distance?

Mount Everest is about 30,000ft tall and the highest airplane we've flown was about 60,000ft. We have flown up weather balloons with go pros that go even higher. Why can't see this huge bright sun over this flat earth?
Assumption other celestial bodies are further away from the surface of the earth.

Planes have flown higher than 60,000 feet.
Those aren’t assumptions.  They’re facts.  Mathematically and directly provable facts...unless you’ve got something that proves otherwise.

Mike
This is a FE forum and those are Re-tard facts.

Nice one, totallackey, resorting to insults total proves your point.

You still haven't answered the question.

We as humans beings have created technology that can take us up and let us see at high altitudes. If you claim the sun didn't actually set but is just on the other side of this flat earth, why can't we see it?
We have gone higher the clouds yet we can not even see a glimpse of sun or it's sunlight, why not?
« Last Edit: September 17, 2018, 09:24:22 PM by ThatsInteresting »
If the answer is so clear and simple, I don't see why it takes all of this back and forth nonsense. Just give an answer with valid proof behind it.